Authors: Sarah Shaber
The rural North Carolinians, with their immense capacity for work and their absolute confidence about right and wrong, were different from their town cousins, who, together with carpetbaggers of various stripes, lived in the cities and university towns. Simon needed to remember that. The Raleigh of Anne Bloodworth's time would have been much more like this than the city it was today.
"Oh, more money, more prestige. I had an excellent academic record. Contracts was my specialty. I took the job with the police department because nothing else was available when my clerkship ran out."
"Why didn't you go somewhere else?"
"A guy."
"Oh."
"I've been engaged twice."
"We're pretty even. I've been married once."
"The thing is, I really like the work. I feel that I'm helping real people, that I'm on the side of the guys wearing white hats instead of whoever walks in the door with that month's overhead in his pocket. And I like the atmosphere. It's much more exciting and interesting than the work my friends in law firms are doing."
Simon groaned. "I would never fit in. I'm hopelessly politically incorrect. I drive an American car. I love rock and roll. I like to eat a steak occasionally. Every now and then, I think a Republican says something sensible—not often, mind you, but sometimes. Also I think faculty, not graduate students, should teach."
"There is no greater bastion of conformity than the fashionable American university today. Everything from the type of shoes you wear to the music you like to the foods you eat and the way you teach has to meet a standard tougher than the handbook of the Junior League of Chattanooga."
"Every profession has its uniform and its code."
"Not to the point of absurdity," Simon said. "When I was in graduate school, I opposed a plan to open a separate student lounge for minority students. I actually think Americans ought to work together, eat together, and room together, not break off into little groups defined by whose great-grandfather abused whom."
"And I was told by some nitwit first-year grad student who was trying to make a name for himself that I was 'no liberal.' Can you believe it? And everyone else in the department went along with it because they were afraid—they had real fear—of being out of political fashion."
"Touche." Julia laughed. "Does that mean we're both hopelessly screwed up?" "Not any more than anyone else, and less than most, probably," Simon said.
Simon had meant to ask her to have coffee at home with him, but he realized, first, that he didn't have any decent coffee in the house and, second, that he was exhausted. The adrenaline or caffeine or whatever had fueled him for the last thirty-six hours was completely depleted. He'd had a good time, but now he wanted to go to sleep.
"I had a really good time," she said.
"I did, too," Simon said. "Can I call you?"
"Sure," she said.
Simon leaned over and kissed her gently on the cheek before he got out of the car. She drove off, thinking that she liked him very much. He was bright, he could talk about something other than his job and money, and he wasn't demanding. He would be fun to pal around with. Of course, he was entirely inappropriate for her otherwise. She kind of wished he hadn't kissed her.
Simon liked Julia, too, but relationships were far from his mind just then. He actually stumbled as he walked up the steps to his house. He leaned against the doorjamb of his bathroom while he urinated, and he didn't bother to brush his teeth. He got partially undressed, falling into bed in his Jockey shorts and socks. He didn't stir all night, even when Maybelline walked on his back on her way to curl up between his legs.
Simon would have slept later the next morning if the city recycling van hadn't stopped outside his house to grind up the entire block's accumulation of bottles and cans. As it was, by his standards it was very late when he woke up, almost ten o'clock. It took about twenty minutes from the time he became conscious to force his eyes open. The process was like a submarine slowly surfacing from a great depth, with the longest stretch right before breaking the surface. Simon sat on the edge of the bed and tried to focus. His eyes were gummy and his mouth tasted like cheap paper towels. A dull ache in the back of his head stretched down his neck and across both shoulders. Well, why not, he thought. After all, he'd been in a car accident two days ago, and yesterday hadn't exactly been restful, either. He told himself firmly that he'd had plenty of sleep and it was time to get up and do something constructive. To do that, he needed a hot shower, a cold shower, a shave, and lots of coffee.
A half an hour later, he was sitting at the International House of Pancakes with David Morgan, whom he had encountered when he walked in the door. The IHOP was a favorite gathering place for students, truckers, taxi drivers, and other denizens of Hillsborough Street. Most of them wore their hair in ponytails and wouldn't be caught dead eating bran muffins. Except for the waitresses, they were all men.
"Why, pray tell, do you want to move it?"
"We located an old brick pipe leading from the cistern straight to the pile, which is about ten feet tall at this point. We've got to move it if we want to find out where the pipe led."
"Exactly. Only a few degrees, but enough to move water along."
"Nineteenth-century pipe? Or eighteenth?"
The skinny waitress put a steaming platter in front of Simon. She dumped a dozen tiny boxes of strawberry jelly next to the plate. Simon painstakingly opened half of them and scraped the contents onto his pancakes. Then he dug in. David watched him eat for a while before he spoke again.
"There is something else," he said.
"What?" Simon said, his mouth full.
"I found a new artifact associated with the Bloodworth burial."
Simon's next forkful stopped before it got to his mouth.
"What was it?"
"A suitcase of some kind."
Simon put his fork down on his plate.
"A suitcase?" he asked. "What kind of suitcase? What was in it? How do you know—"
"Just give me a chance," David said. "When Julia McGloughlan said something to me about watching out for other items that might be related to the body, I got curious. So I began to excavate the area around her body at the depth at which she was found. I located the bag several feet from her."
"It could have nothing to do with Anne Bloodworth," Simon said.
"But it does," David said.
"Out with it. I promise to be properly excited."
"The bag had the initials AHB inscribed on the clasp."
"Damnation," Simon said through a mouthful of breakfast. "She was leaving town!"
"Why would anybody want to bury an old carpetbag? You said yourself it was associated with the body. Anne Bloodworth was going somewhere far enough away and for long enough that she needed luggage, and after she was killed, the murderer had to conceal the bag, too. Nothing else makes sense."
THE PRESERVATION SOCIETY'S office was in a late addition that housed the Bloodworth kitchen. It had been added at the back of the house and didn't look right even when painted the same colors and trim as the rest of the house, and it really should have been torn down. But the society needed a place in the house to use as an office for its docents. Rather than convert an historical part of the house, they had stripped the kitchen and put in a couple of desks, a coat rack, two telephones, a metal cabinet that locked, and a Coke machine.
David unlocked the cabinet and removed what looked like a dirt clod with tree roots clinging to it. The mess was sealed in a big plastic Ziploc bag. Simon sat down at one of the desks and examined the sodden bag. Decayed brown leather handles were attached by brass rings to a spine with a hinge at each end. The brass clasp still firmly held the two halves of the spine together and to what was left of the fabric of the bag. David had rubbed the part of the clasp with Anne Bloodworth's monogram until it was bright, and the initials were simple and clear. The fabric body of the carpetbag had decayed, but Simon could still make out its pattern of red cabbage roses with green leaves. The carpetbag was the duffel bag of its time—made of leftover carpet remnants, it was cheap and strong. Its mouth opened wide to accommodate almost any kind of baggage its owner wanted to carry. Simon carefully held up the spine to calculate how big the bag was. It was about two feet long and would have held a lot.
For most people, the decayed carpetbag was just another artifact. For Simon, it was much more. It had belonged to a human being, and it represented the act of someone leaving somewhere to go someplace else. It had meaning; it had figured in a murder. Simon knew that Anne Bloodworth had had this bag with her when she was shot, knew it as well as he knew his own name. He wasn't worried about the details missing from his scenario. He knew the truth of it. And he was more determined than ever to decipher the mystery of Anne Bloodworth's death.
"Some of us have real jobs," David said, disturbing Simon's reverie.
"Sorry," Simon said. "Listen, can I have this? I'd like to give it to Sergeant Gates."
"THINGS ARE REALLY DIFFERENT AROUND HERE," JUDY SAID TO Simon when he stopped by the faculty mailbox on his way to his office. "Alex went into his office this morning and closed the door. We haven't heard a peep from him since—no whining, no moaning, no complaints. You must have really scared him."
"I should think so," Simon said. "I'm a scary person."
"Seriously, he's not the same man."
"Good. Let's hope it stays that way."
Simon took his mail, his messages, and a cold Coke into his office and closed the door. He sat in his chair and put his feet up on his desk, popping the top of his Coke. For the first time in a long while, he felt as if he was in some kind of control of his life. He knew this feeling was an illusion, but he welcomed it anyway. Maybe he would even go to the grocery store later.
His mail was all junk, and the telephone messages were mostly concerned with his car accident. There were two calls from his insurance agent and one from the garage that was working on his car, probably about settlements and estimates. There were calls from Julia and from David. They were hours old, so he crumpled them and threw them in the wastepaper basket. The last one was from the florist, who said he had the information Simon had requested. Simon's feet landed on the floor with a thud, he chugged his Coke, and headed out the door.